Yorkshire Post

‘Closing doors’ to new GP patients

- ROB PARSONS NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT Email: rob.parsons@ypn.co.uk Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

HEALTH: GP practices are reaching the point where closing their doors to new patients could be the “only viable way to ensure patient safety”, a leading Yorkshire medic has said.

But family doctors would only consider this action as a final recourse, according to the British Medical Associatio­n’s GP committee chairman.

GP PRACTICES are reaching the point where closing their doors to new patients could be the “only viable way to ensure patient safety”, a leading Yorkshire medic has said.

But family doctors would only consider this action as a final recourse, according to the British Medical Associatio­n’s (BMA) GP committee chairman Dr Richard Vautrey, who also works as a GP in Meanwood, Leeds.

Dr Vautrey has written to Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt calling for a meeting to discuss the “urgent challenges” facing GPs. These include rising indemnity costs, workload pressures and ensuring adequate funding reaches frontline services.

He highlighte­d a recent BMA poll which found that more than half of GP practices would consider closing their doors to new patients to offset mounting pressure on services.

The BMA survey of 1,870 GPs’ surgeries in England found 54 per cent (1,005) favoured temporaril­y suspending admissions to their practice lists.

This would allow them to focus on providing safe care to patients already signed up to their service, the BMA said.

More drasticall­y, 44 per cent of the GPs surveyed (822) said they would consider applying to NHS England to halt new patient registrati­on permanentl­y.

Dr Vautrey wrote: “This clearly demonstrat­es the huge pressures facing general practice. GPs would only consider such action as a final recourse.

“We have, unfortunat­ely, seen this borne out with recent announceme­nts of practices having to close their lists.

“We are deeply concerned that this survey demonstrat­es practices are reaching the point where closing their lists seems the only viable way to ensure patient safety.”

He said the latest figures have shown a dip in the number of GPs as he called on the Government to tackle recruitmen­t and retention in general practice.

He added that rising indemnity costs are “not just adding to the severe financial difficulti­es felt across primary care, but further exacerbati­ng the existing primary care workforce crisis”.

Dr Vautrey said additional funding for GP services was “failing to reach frontline primary care services in a way that makes a tangible difference”.

He continued: “With unpreceden­ted patient demand, a recruitmen­t and retention crisis, huge workforce shortfalls and major practice premises problems, it is no wonder that GPs are having to consider action such as suspending their patient lists.”

Last month it emerged that seven of the eight GP practices in Folkestone, Kent, were planning to collective­ly close their doors to new patients amid safety concerns.

The practices said taking any more patients on would pose a risk to those who currently use their services.

Separately, the BMA said yesterday that new funding announced for out-of-hours indemnity costs is recognitio­n of the pressures GPs will be under during the winter and will give doctors ‘some short-term confidence’.

NHS England revealed that it had found £10m to help ‘strengthen’ out-of-hours GP services through financial support for indemnity costs, meaning more than 80,000 GP sessions will be able to take place in the next six months.

Dr Vautrey said the BMA had been pushing for the funding for ‘some time’ and had been concerned about the delayed announceme­nt, but welcomed the news.

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